Sunday Night Football: Today score| Who commentates| 4k

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All “Sunday Night Football” games are broadcast on NBC, which has exclusive broadcast rights to the program. For example, the network’s online. Today we will discuss about Sunday Night Football: Today score| Who commentates| 4k.

Sunday Night Football: Today score| Who commentates| 4k

NBC Sunday Night Football (abbreviated as SNF) is a weekly television broadcast of National Football League (NFL) games in the United States on NBC and Peacock. It began airing on August 6, 2006 with the Pro Football Hall of Fame game,[1] which opened that year’s preseason. NBC took over the broadcast rights for the Sunday prime time game from ESPN, which aired from 1987 to 2005. At the same time, ESPN began airing Monday Night Football after it was dropped from sister network ABC. First, NBC broadcast the American Football League (AFL), and later the American Football Conference (AFC) from 1965 to 1997, when CBS took over those rights.

Also known as Sunday Night Football on NBC
SNF
Genre American football telecasts
Directed by Drew Esocoff
Presented by Commentators:
Al Michaels
Cris Collinsworth
Reporter:
Michele Tafoya
Rules analyst:
Terry McAulay
Spanish commentators:
Jorge Andres
Carlos Mauricio Ramirez
Theme music composer John Williams (2006–2008) & Joel Beckerman (Super Bowl XLIII–present) (main theme)
Opening theme “Waiting All Day for Sunday Night” by Carrie Underwood
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 16
No. of episodes 307 (list of episodes)
Production
Producer Fred Gaudelli
Production locations Various NFL stadiums (game telecasts and Super Bowl pre-game shows)
Pre-game show:
NBC Sports Headquarters, Stamford, Connecticut
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 210 minutes or until game ends (inc. adverts)
Production companies National Football League
NBC Sports
Release
Original network NBC
Peacock
Telemundo(In Spanish)
Original release August 6, 2006 –
present
Chronology
Preceded by ESPN Sunday Night Football
Related shows NFL on NBC
Football Night in America

Today score

Sunday Night Football: Today score| Who commentates| 4k

The Raiders entered the NFL playoffs with a 35-32 overtime win over the Chargers in Las Vegas on Sunday night.

Daniel Carlsen kicked the game-winning field goal with no time saved on the clock in the OT. The Raiders (10-7) will open the wild-card round against the Bengals in Cincinnati on Saturday afternoon.Las Vegas quarterback Derek Carr completed 20 of 36 passes for 186 yards with two touchdowns. Running back, Josh Jacobs led on the ground with 26 carries for 132 yards and a touchdown. Justin Herbert completed 34 of 64 passes for 383 yards with three touchdowns and an interception for the Chargers. 

Who commentates

Sunday Night Football: Today score| Who commentates| 4k

 

Play-by-play announcers

  • Mike Patrick (1987–2005)
  • Pat Summerall (fill-in, 2004)
  • Mike Tirico: (#2, 2005)[5]

NOTE: Pat Summerall filled in for Mike Patrick who was recovering from heart bypass surgery.

Color commentators

  • Roy Firestone (1987)
  • Joe Theismann (1988–2005)
  • Paul Maguire (1998–2005)
  • Sterling Sharpe: (#2, 2005)[5]

Sideline reporter

  • Mark Malone (1994–1996)
  • Ron Jaworski (1997)
  • Solomon Wilcots (1998–2000)
  • Suzy Kolber (2001–2005)

Studio hosts

  • Chris Berman (1987-2005)

Studio analysts

  • Pete Axthelm (1987)
  • Tom Jackson

Guest commentators (1987 only

  • Larry Csonka (twice)
  • John Matuszak (twice)
  • Roger Staubach
  • Jim Brown
  • Ed Marinaro
  • Tom Jackson
  • O. J. Simpson
  • Jack Reynolds
  • Dick Butkus

4k

Games in 4K HDR will be available through the Fox Sports and Fox Now apps on Apple TV 4K and select Roku devices, plus FuboTV and YouTube TV streaming packages that carry the channel. Additionally, some viewers can get 4K service from pay-TV providers such as Altice/Optimum, Comcast Xfinity, DirecTV, and Verizon FiOS.

Soccer fans who have decided to cut the cable cord have plenty of options for streaming NFL action this season. With the right streaming services, you can watch Sunday afternoon games on CBS and Fox, “Sunday Night Football” on NBC and “Monday Night Football” on ESPN.

“Thursday Night Football” is spread across Fox, Amazon Prime/Twitch, and the NFL Network. (In September, games air only on the NFL Network; Fox and Prime Video coverage begins in October.)

Additionally, some games will be available on new streaming services, such as Peacock from NBCUniversal and Paramount from ViacomCBS.

If you’re using a cable-replacement streaming service, you may already have access to a good number of games. However, live local channels are not available on all cable-replacement streaming services in all markets. You’ll need these channels to watch games in your area, so review the channel lineup before subscribing to a service like Hulu Live TV, Sling TV, or YouTube TV.

Ratings